Expression of neuron‐specific markers by the vomeronasal neuroepithelium in six species of primates
- 7 October 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Anatomical Record Part A: Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology
- Vol. 281A (1) , 1190-1200
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.a.20124
Abstract
Vomeronasal organ (VNO) morphology varies markedly across primate taxa. Old World monkeys display no postnatal VNO. Humans and at least some apes retain a vestigial VNO during postnatal life, whereas the strepsirrhines and New World Monkeys present a morphologically well‐defined VNO that, in many species, is presumed to function as an olfactory organ. Available microanatomical and behavioral studies suggest that VNO function in these species does not precisely duplicate that described in other mammalian taxa. The questions of which species retain a functional VNO and what functions they serve require inquiry along diverse lines but, to be functional, the vomeronasal epithelium must be neuronal and olfactory. We used immunohistochemistry to establish these criteria in six primate species. We compared the expression of two neuronal markers, neuron‐specific β‐tubulin (BT) and protein gene product 9.5, and olfactory marker protein (OMP), a marker of mature olfactory sensory neurons, in paraffin‐embedded VNO sections from two strepsirrhine and four haplorhine species, all of which retain morphologically well‐defined VNOs during postnatal life. The infant Eulemur mongoz, adult Otolemur crassicaudatus, neonatal Leontopithicus rosalia, and adult Callithrix jacchus express all three proteins in their well‐defined vomeronasal neuroepithelia. The infant Tarsius syrichta showed some BT and OMP immunoreactivity. We establish that two strepsirrhine species and at least some New World haplorhines have mature sensory neurons in the VNO. In contrast, at all ages examined, Saguinus geoffroyi VNO expresses these markers in only a few cells.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Observations on the vomeronasal organ of prenatal Tarsius bancanus borneanus with implications for ancestral morphologyJournal of Anatomy, 2003
- Structure and function of the vomeronasal system: an updateProgress in Neurobiology, 2003
- Recent progress in the neurobiology of the vomeronasal organMicroscopy Research and Technique, 2002
- Histological definition of the vomeronasal organ in humans and chimpanzees, with a comparison to other primatesThe Anatomical Record, 2002
- The existence of the vomeronasal organ in postnatal chimpanzees and evidence for its homology with that of humansJournal of Anatomy, 2001
- Sensitivity and Behavioral Responses to the Pheromone Androstenone Are Not Mediated by the Vomeronasal Organ in Domestic PigsBrain, Behavior and Evolution, 1997
- Age and differentiation-related differences in neuron-specific tubulin immunostaining of olfactory sensory neuronsDevelopmental Brain Research, 1994
- Protein gene product 9.5 in the developing and mature rat vomeronasal organDevelopmental Brain Research, 1994
- Fine Structure of the Vomeronasal Organ in the Common Marmoset (Callithrix jacchus)Folia Primatologica, 1992
- Neurobehavioral evidence for the involvement of the vomeronasal system in mammalian reproductionNeuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 1979